
25 May 2017 | 19 replies
I agree with @Colleen F.. I

20 June 2017 | 5 replies
You should shop around for a better re-fi rate as 8% seems very high.

3 July 2017 | 7 replies
It would have to be a unicorn of an investment for me to re-fi, when I eventually do have equity ;) But yes I hear what you're saying.

1 June 2017 | 10 replies
I'm interested in the answer to this one - I'll be doing the same thing on a property late next year when we are up to re-fi.

14 January 2019 | 60 replies
Nice, if you have enough equity built up, I would probably re-fi and put it into a newer rental property if I were you :)

8 July 2018 | 9 replies
The link below is what I believe the current rules are for the appeal to the Pennsylvania Superior Court. http://www.pacourts.us/assets/files/setting-901/fi...When it comes to the lease expiration, you'll likely win in that no judge will force you to rent the property based on a lease that expired (unless the lease grants renewal rights to the tenant).

23 July 2017 | 0 replies
At this point our only solutions are these: 1) Put a contractor on title, sell the house when rehab is complete, I get what I owe out of it, and contractor gets everything else.2) Rent-to-Own, we Re-fi the loan to get out from under the Hard Money Loan currently on it, contractor/buyer moves into house on a Lease/Option and finishes the project while living in it.Here’s my questions for BP:What’s the best way (verbiage) to advertise for this scenario?

23 July 2017 | 0 replies
At this point our only solutions are these: 1) Put a contractor on title, sell the house when rehab is complete, I get what I owe out of it, and contractor gets everything else.2) Rent-to-Own, we Re-fi the loan to get out from under the Hard Money Loan currently on it, contractor/buyer moves into house on a Lease/Option and finishes the project while living in it.Here’s my questions for BP:What’s the best way (verbiage) to advertise for this scenario?